Tagged The Pandorica Opens

io9.com has written an article to fill the gap of â€œno Nu-whoâ€Â on BBC America this week by listing plot devices that they donâ€™t like being overused in Steven Moffat episodes of Doctor Who. Itâ€™s an interesting and quite frankly accurate look at what keeps recurring in the world of Doctor Who but at the same…

Dry, tired eyes? Shakes? Trouble sleeping? If you’re suffering from any of the above, chances are you can’t quite reconcile the events of The Big Bang with reason, logic, or what Doctor Who has already taught you about time travel. You’re not alone. There are thousands like you, and as a result Den of Geek…

Matt Nida looks back at Series 5… It all started so well. Expectations – fan and public alike – were high for Doctor Whoâ€™s return in 2010. With The Eleventh Hour, the new team confidently delivered the best season opener since the show was revived in 2005. Better still, the opening twenty minutes – where…

As further proof that the 31st season of Doctor Who went from brilliant to downright awe-inspiring, Digital Spy has reported that the climactic thirteenth episode, The Big Bang, received an Appreciation Index score of 89! The Appreciation Index is a measure of how much an audience fancies a programme, where any score between 80 and…

With The Pandorica Opens/The Big Bang now resolved, the time has come for you to tell us how you would rate it in relation to the other season finales. You’ll notice that we’ve intentionally left out The End of Time – we’ll declare this an “end of era” as opposed to an “end of season”…

Thatâ€™s it folks; and as the Doctor, Amy and Rory disappear into the vortex ready to collect their tickets for the Orient Express, thereâ€™s just the small matter of rounding up the uniformly excellentÂ reviews of the finale The Big Bang. Disregarding where you stand on the ethics of reviewers ripping quotes from peoples Tweets…

I love being right. Remember when Russell T Davies and David Tennant gave us the double whammy of bad news back in 2008 â€“ that there would only be five episodes of Doctor Who in 2009 (a numerical claim that later changed, as we know) and that the Tenth Doctor would then be no more?…